I've been thinking. Since it looks more likely that the JPY is more likely to weaken than strengthen against the USD if the Trump administration's policies stoke inflation rather than quell it, it would be crazy to go with my general preference for hedged rather than unhedged international bond index funds.sutebayashi wrote: ↑Fri Jan 03, 2025 11:41 amYeah, it’s not cheap to be short dollars / long yen these days. (I made some decent money being on the other side of that last year, and my 2025 plan is similar as of today)ChapInTokyo wrote: ↑Fri Jan 03, 2025 7:05 am Made me think twice about my usual liking for currency hedging my bond allocations…
At least for the Tsumitate part, if one is to take a long term view then I don’t think the currency fluctuations will matter much, unless there is a situation where the yen persistently strengthens month after month for years and years, over one’s investment horizon.
Would it perhaps make sense to buy unhedged now, and then re-buy them in hedged version when the Fed rates actually fall to normal levels later in the year or maybe even next year? What's the thinking on this among the gurus on this board?
I mean, just have a look at how the prices of the hedged international bond funds (Tawara No-load Developed Market Bond Fund Hedged (blue line) and the Next Funds International Bonds FTSE World Bonds Index excluding Japan ETF hedged (purple line) take a nose dive when the dollar yen exchange rate (pink line)) goes up, whereas the prices of the hedged intl bond index funds (Next Funds International Bonds FTSE World Bonds Index excluding Japan ETF unhedged (yellow line) and the eMaxis Slim Developed Market Bond Index Fund Unhedged (green line) follow the general upward direction of the pink dollar yen exchange rate line...